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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Review Of New Urban Spaces: Urban Theory And The Scale Question By Neil Brenner, Jean-Paul D. Addie Oct 2019

Review Of New Urban Spaces: Urban Theory And The Scale Question By Neil Brenner, Jean-Paul D. Addie

USI Publications

New Urban Spaces is a landmark contribution to urban and regional studies. Through a rich, dense and provocative argument, Neil Brenner synthesizes over a decade-and-a-half's work on state rescaling, globalization and urban governance into a comprehensive and radical retheorization of urbanization.


The Impact Of Message Source On The Effectiveness Of Communications About Climate Change, Toby Bolsen, Risa Palm, Justin Kingsland Jul 2019

The Impact Of Message Source On The Effectiveness Of Communications About Climate Change, Toby Bolsen, Risa Palm, Justin Kingsland

USI Publications

We conducted a survey experiment in which we presented 1,850 respondents with one of two versions of an appeal emphasizing either the threats to the environment or threats to national security of the United States as a result of climate change. The messages were attributed to one of four sources: Republican Party leaders, Democratic Party leaders, military officials, or climate scientists. The results reveal that messages attributed to military leaders, or to Republican Party leaders, can enhance the impact of the appeal. This finding underscores the importance that the source of any communication can have on its overall effectiveness.


In What Sense Suburban Infrastructure?, Jean-Paul D. Addie Apr 2019

In What Sense Suburban Infrastructure?, Jean-Paul D. Addie

USI Publications

The aim of this chapter is to develop an analytically meaningful framework to analyze ‘suburban infrastructure’ by paying concerted attention to how infrastructures relate to the production and experience of dynamic and highly variegated suburban environments. My approach is built around two conceptual triads: the first unpacks the modalities of infrastructures as they exist in, for, and of suburbs (broadly understood as the landscapes of extended urbanization); the second discloses the political economic processes (suburbanization), lived experience (suburbanism), and dynamics of mediation internalized by particular suburban infrastructures. I am not concerned with the tasks of ensuring definitional rigor or bounding …


Counteracting Climate Science Politicization With Effective Frames And Imagery, Toby Bolsen, Risa Palm, Justin Kingsland Mar 2019

Counteracting Climate Science Politicization With Effective Frames And Imagery, Toby Bolsen, Risa Palm, Justin Kingsland

USI Publications

Politicization of science occurs when the inherent uncertainty of science is emphasized to cast doubt on scientific consensus. Climate change has become particularly susceptible to this kind of politicization. In this article, we report the results of a survey experiment in which we manipulated text frames and visual imagery associated with two types of environmental hazards linked to climate change—sea level rise with associated flooding and increased heat levels with associated drought and wildfires. We present evidence that the use of visual imagery can counter the effects that science politicization has on climate change beliefs and behaviors.


Rent Gap, Jean-Paul Addie Jan 2019

Rent Gap, Jean-Paul Addie

USI Publications

The rent gap refers to the difference between the capitalized rent realized from a plot of land and the potential rent possible if it were developed to its “highest and best” use. Introduced by Neil Smith in 1979, the rent gap provides a systematic production-side theory of urban rent and inner-city transformation. The concept has been critiqued, however, for dismissing the role of individual agents and consumption preferences in explanatory accounts of gentrification.


Black Homebuying After The Crisis: Appreciation Patterns In Fifteen Large Metropolitan Areas, Daniel Immergluck, Stephanie Earl, Allison Powell Jan 2019

Black Homebuying After The Crisis: Appreciation Patterns In Fifteen Large Metropolitan Areas, Daniel Immergluck, Stephanie Earl, Allison Powell

USI Publications

No abstract provided.